Day 024 - 15 Sep 94 - Page 06
1
2 Q. We will go into more detail on that a little later on.
3 Can you give us a summary of what the second major dispute
4 you had with McDonald's in 1987?
5 A. In the early part of 1987, I learned that McDonald's
6 was advertising the nutritional attributes of its products
7 in what was both in some respects false and in other
8 respects a misleading and deceptive manner. On behalf of
9 the state of Texas the Attorney Generals office wrote to
10 McDonald's advising them there was a problem, that they
11 were violating the law, as I recall -- I would have to see
12 the letter to be specific on that -- and requesting or
13 demanding they stopped the practice, stopped, in
14 particular, these advertisements as they were currently
15 constituted.
16
17 Q. Because they were ---?
18 A. Because the advertisements were both inspecific and,
19 when considered as a whole, were deceptive. They claimed
20 in an implicit manner but in a manner that, in my
21 judgment, consumers would believe, and certainly in a
22 manner McDonald's wanted consumers to believe, that
23 McDonald's food was, as a whole, nutritious. As a whole,
24 McDonald's food is not nutritious, making that claim as a
25 violation of our law. It is also a violation of the New
26 York law and the California state law prohibiting false
27 and deceptive advertising marketing practices.
28
29 Q. Did this advertising campaign cease after you threatened
30 some kind of legal action?
31 A. After we wrote to McDonald's, engaged in some form of
32 continued conversations, we received assurances from
33 McDonald's that the campaign was not -- had a finite
34 term. There were some insertions in magazines that they
35 advised us could not be stopped, but they promised us that
36 no new insertions, no new advertisements, had been placed
37 since shortly after they received my initial communication
38 from them.
39
40 Because we were still attempting to work with the entire
41 fastfood industry in a co-operative effort to get this
42 information out to the American public, we decided against
43 taking further enforcement action, although McDonald's did
44 promise us that if it stopped the practice we still, under
45 our laws, could have sued for penalties and injunctive
46 relief. Our laws do not require us to take the word of
47 companies that an act or practice is stopped. They
48 certainly do not require us to waive penalties just
49 because a company says it will not violate the law again.
50 However, in the interest of co-operation, in this instance
51 we did accept McDonald's assurance it would voluntarily
52 comply with our laws.
53
54 Q. These were two fairly substantial disputes with
55 McDonald's, is that correct? What I am trying to say is,
56 was there something your office was focusing on at the
57 exclusion to your work with other companies?
58 A. This was just -- both of these were just in the course
59 of my duties as an Assistant Attorney General. McDonald's
60 was no higher up on the scale than many other companies.